Biography: life and films
François Cluzet was born in Paris on 21st September 1955, the
son of a newspaper vendor. As a teenager, he sang in rock groups,
but he made up his mind to become an actor after he saw Jacques Brel
perform in a stage production of
L'Homme
de la Mancha. He left school at 17 to study drama, first
at the Cours Simon. Having begun his career on stage, he appeared
in a few films for television. Diane Kurys then gave him his
first screen role in her second feature
Cocktail Molotov (1980).
Immediately after this he had a substantial part in
Le Cheval d'orgueil (1980),
directed by Claude Chabrol, who would employ him on several of his
subsequent films, notably
Une affaire de femmes (1988)
and
L'Enfer (1994).
It was in 1983 that Cluzet's potential as a screen actor of the first
rank was first recognised, through his performances in Jean Becker's
L'Été meurtrier
(1983) and Gérard Mordillat's
Vive
la sociale! (1983), which won him the Prix Jean-Gabin and two
César nominations (one for Best Supporting Actor, the other for
Most Promising Actor) in 1984. This is the point at which Cluzet's
acting career took off. He had no difficulty attracting offers of
work from some of France's most talented auteur filmmakers, from
promising debutants like Claire Denis (
Chocolat,
1988) to old hands such as Bertrand Tavernier (
'Round Midnight, 1986) and Bertrand
Blier (
Trop belle pour toi,
1989). He was comfortable playing alongside other high profile
actors, such as Patrick Bruel in Pierre Jolivet's
Force majeure (1989) and
Gérard Depardieu in Claude Zidi's
Deux
(1989). It was in an unlikely partnership with Depardieu's son
Guillaume that Cluzet demonstrated a surprising flair for comedy, in
Pierre Salvadori's
Les Apprentis (1995), whilst
his penchant for playing tormented loners is powerfully revealed in
Olivier Assayas's
Fin août, début septembre
(1998).
The genre with which François Cluzet is perhaps most associated
is the classic French thriller. His brooding screen presence and
subtle aura of vulnerability ensure he is well-suited to the dusky,
labyrinthine world of the polar, demonstrated by his standout
performance in Guillaume Canet's
Ne le dis à personne
(2006), the film that won Cluzet his first Best Actor
César. He subsequently starred alongside Canet in Jacques
Maillot's realist gangster film
Les Liens du sang (2008) and
was chillingly at ease in the role of real-life bank robber Toni
Musulin in Philippe Godeau's
11.6 (2013). Before this,
Goddeau gave Cluzet one of his more memorable roles in
Le Dernier pour la route
(2009), in which he portrayed a man struggling with alcoholism with
harrowing conviction. In 2011, Cluzet starred in the year's
biggest hit,
Intouchables (2011), a
mainstream comedy in which he played a paralysed man regaining his zest
for living. Not only did this film, a worldwide hit, raise
Cluzet's international profile considerably, it also secured his
standing as one of France's most respected and best-loved actors.
© James Travers 2013
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Filmography
Key: a = actor